Abstract

BackgroundMutations in the CEP290 (cilia-centrosomal protein 290 kDa) gene in Leber congenital amaurosis (LCA) cause early onset visual loss but retained cone photoreceptors in the fovea, which is the potential therapeutic target. A cone-only mouse model carrying a Cep290 gene mutation, rd16;Nrl−/−, was engineered to mimic the human disease. In the current study, we determined the natural history of retinal structure and function in this murine model to permit design of pre-clinical proof-of-concept studies and allow progress to be made toward human therapy. Analyses of retinal structure and visual function in CEP290-LCA patients were also performed for comparison with the results in the model.Methods Rd16;Nrl−/− mice were studied in the first 90 days of life with optical coherence tomography (OCT), electroretinography (ERG), retinal histopathology and immunocytochemistry. Structure and function data from a cohort of patients with CEP290-LCA (n = 15; ages 7–48) were compared with those of the model.Results CEP290-LCA patients retain a central island of photoreceptors with normal thickness at the fovea (despite severe visual loss); the extent of this island declined slowly with age. The rd16;Nrl−/− model also showed a relatively slow photoreceptor layer decline in thickness with ∼80% remaining at 3 months. The number of pseudorosettes also became reduced. By comparison to single mutant Nrl−/− mice, UV- and M-cone ERGs of rd16;Nrl−/− were at least 1 log unit reduced at 1 month of age and declined further over the 3 months of monitoring. Expression of GNAT2 and S-opsin also decreased with age.ConclusionsThe natural history of early loss of photoreceptor function with retained cone cell nuclei is common to both CEP290-LCA patients and the rd16;Nrl−/− murine model. Pre-clinical proof-of-concept studies for uniocular therapies would seem most appropriate to begin with intervention at P35–40 and re-study after one month by assaying interocular difference in the UV-cone ERG.

Highlights

  • Leber congenital amaurosis (LCA) is a molecularly heterogeneous group of severe early-onset human diseases [1,2]

  • The form of LCA associated with RPE65 gene mutations can have retained photoreceptors [4] and treating regions with residual retinal pigment epithelium with viral-mediated gene augmentation has led to remarkable increases in vision

  • The road to clinical trials of RPE65-LCA was paved by critical proof-of-concept research with large and small animal models of the human disease [5]

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Summary

Introduction

Leber congenital amaurosis (LCA) is a molecularly heterogeneous group of severe early-onset human diseases [1,2]. LCA patients show severe visual loss early in life, but the morphological basis of the malfunction differs among genotypes [3]. The road to clinical trials of RPE65-LCA was paved by critical proof-of-concept research with large and small animal models of the human disease [5]. Mutations in the CEP290 (cilia-centrosomal protein 290 kDa) gene in Leber congenital amaurosis (LCA) cause early onset visual loss but retained cone photoreceptors in the fovea, which is the potential therapeutic target. Analyses of retinal structure and visual function in CEP290-LCA patients were performed for comparison with the results in the model

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